Reference is made to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/495,966 filed Sep. 25, 2014, entitled “Reducing Toning Spacing Sensitivity” by Peter S. Alexandrovich et al, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.
This invention pertains to the field of electrophotographic printing and particularly to two-component magnetic brush development processes and carrier materials wherein the toning spacing sensitivity in an electrophotographic process is reduced.
Electrophotography is a useful process for printing images on a receiver (or “imaging substrate”), such as a piece or sheet of paper or another planar medium, plastic, glass, fabric, metal, or other objects as will be described below. In this process, an electrostatic latent image is formed on a photoreceptor by uniformly charging the photoreceptor and then discharging selected areas of the uniform charge to yield an electrostatic charge pattern corresponding to the desired image (a “latent image”).
After the latent image is formed, charged toner particles are brought into the vicinity of the photoreceptor and are attracted to the latent image to develop the latent image into a visible image. Note that the visible image might not be readily visible to the naked eye depending on the composition of the toner particles.
After the latent image is developed into a visible image on the photoreceptor, a suitable receiver is brought into juxtaposition with the visible image. A suitable electric field is applied to transfer the toner particles of the visible image to the receiver to form the desired print image on the receiver. The imaging process is typically repeated many times with reusable photoreceptors. The photoreceptor is typically in the form of a drum or a roller, but can also be in the form of a belt. The receiver can also be an intermediate transfer member, from which the visible image is further transferred to the final receiver such as a piece of paper. Thermal transfer processes are also useful in the same manner.
The receiver is then removed from its operative association with the photoreceptor and subjected to heat or pressure to permanently fix (“fuse”) the print image to the receiver. Plural print images, e.g., of separations of different colors, are overlaid on one receiver before fusing to form a multi-color print image on the receiver.
The present invention describes improvements to the development or toning process. Numerous methods of development of the latent electrostatic image with charged toner particles are available. Liquid development with insulating carrier fluids including suspended charged toner particles can be used, as can methods with dry toner particles. Common dry toning processes include both mono-component and two-component methods. Mono-component toning systems generally apply dry toner particles to a development roller by way of a foam roller, a doctor blade, or both; the development roller then presents the charged toner to the electrostatic latent image on the photoreceptor. Two-component toning systems typically include toner particles and oppositely charged magnetic carrier particles, the mixture of which is called a two-component developer, attracted to a magnetic brush toning apparatus which then supplies developer to the latent electrostatic image.
Two-component development processes utilizing magnetic brush toning assemblies are also commercially practiced in a variety of forms. What is defined herein as “conventional” two-component development devices utilize a type of magnetic brush roller including a conductive, non-magnetic rotating shell or sleeve with internal stationary magnets. The shell is typically roughened in some fashion to aid in developer transport including flutes or grooves or simple random textures. The magnets are positioned at appropriate places to attract developer from a feed auger or feed roller, and at a position in opposition to the photoreceptor to provide a development zone where the carrier particles are held back magnetically while toner particles are attracted to the latent electrostatic image on the photoreceptor. There can be a blade or skive between the feed auger or roller and the toning roller to regulate the mass area density of the toning nap, the portion of the magnetic brush where the brush is in contact with the photoreceptor surface. The magnet configuration in the region after the toning zone (in the direction of shell rotation) is such that the developer is not attracted to the roller and can fall back into a return auger or a mixing sump depending on the design of the apparatus. Fresh replenisher toner is added to the mixing sump or the feed roller where it can triboelectrically charge against the magnetic carrier particles though mechanical agitation. Three auger toning stations are also common.
The earliest copiers and printers with conventional two-component development processes used magnetic carrier particles of relatively high magnetic saturation moment (Ms) such as sponge iron or stainless steel. These materials have a very low degree of permanent magnetic character; they do not retain a magnetization after exposure to a magnetic field. They have low remanence magnetization (Mr), low magnetic coercivity (Hc) values, and are termed soft magnetic materials. These particles form long, stiff magnetic chains on the toning roller. The mean particle diameter of such materials was typically in the range of 100-250 microns. Controlled electrical conductivity of the developer was important to uniformly tone both large solid areas and lines or text information characterized by high fringe electric fields. The development gap, defined as the closest distance between the toning roller and the photoreceptor, was typically about 200 mil (about 5000 microns). Such methods have been termed “thick nap” development processes.
More recent electrophotographic hardware is characterized by the use of “thin nap” two-component development methods including stationary magnetic poles in the development roller. These processes typically use magnetically soft, ferrite based carrier materials, such as copper-zinc ferrite, manganese ferrite, manganese-magnesium-strontium ferrite, magnetite, and others. The mean diameter of the carrier particles is generally in the range of 20 to 100 microns. The saturation magnetic moment of these ferrites is lower than the materials used for thick nap development processes. The development spacing is generally in the range of 10 to 20 mil, or about 250 to 500 microns. Due to the soft magnetic nature of such carrier materials there is not a particle to particle magnetic interaction in the absence of an external field. The developers are thus free flowing powders in the mixing and transport portions of the development hardware, which generally include simple spiral auger devices. The free flowing nature of soft ferrite developer is advantageous in the avoidance of toner depletion related mixing uniformity artifacts on prints due to rapid mixing and tribocharging with replenisher toner.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,595,850 to Honjo et al. describes magnetically soft manganese-magnesium-strontium ferrite particle compositions and their use as carriers for the purpose of electrophotographic two-component development. Such carriers can also contain a resin coating. The assignee to this patent, Powdertech Co. Ltd. of Chiba-ken, Japan, currently supplies these materials to the electrophotographic copier and printer industry, marketed as the “EF” ferrite product line. Such materials are manufactured over a range of sizes, shapes and electrical conductivities. It is believed that this product line today represents the world's predominant magnetic carrier used in thin nap two-component electrophotographic processes.
Thin nap development processes are also practiced with rotating rather than stationary core magnets. A toning roller with rotating core magnets requires the use of magnetically hard carrier particles such that the alternating magnetic field due to the magnet core rotation causes flipping or jumping action of the developer. A magnetically hard material can retain its magnetization after exposure to a magnetic field; hard magnetic materials are also known as permanent magnetic materials. It has been observed in our laboratory that soft magnetic materials will flow for a short period of time on a toning roller with a rotating magnetic core, but will then start to aggregate into non-moving chains of developer which grow in the circumferential direction of the roller. This aggregation or “freezing” process results in a non-functional magnetic brush. A toning process with rotating core magnets in the magnetic brush roller and permanently magnetized hard magnetic carrier materials is termed small particle development (SPD). The developer on an SPD toning roller transports in response to both the rotation of the magnetic core and the rotation of the shell.
The flow driven by the magnets is in the opposite direction to the rotation of the magnets; if the rotation of the magnets is for example clockwise, the developer appears to jump backwards in the counter-clockwise direction as attracted by each incoming pole of the rotating core magnets. The flow due to core magnet rotation alone can be enough to provide adequate development of toner. However in most applications of SPD development the shell is also rotated, typically in the direction of flow due to the core magnets which is typically co-current with the rotation of the photoreceptor, which means that the shell and its internal magnetic core are rotating in opposite directions. The observed developer motion is thus due to a combination of core driven and shell driven flow. SPD development has been practiced with both rotating and stationary toning shells. The development spacing is typically in the range of 10 to 20 mil, or 250 to 500 microns. Strontium ferrite based carrier particles in the size range of 15 to 30 microns median diameter have been used. In general, as typically practiced, SPD two-component carrier particles are smaller than conventional two-component carrier particles.
Commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 4,473,029 to Fritz et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, describes particular embodiments of SPD toning. Saturation or magnetization of the carrier in a magnetic field that yields an induced moment of at least 25 emu/g is described as useful to reduce the attraction of carrier to the photoreceptor (also known as DPU for developer pick-up).
Commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 4,546,060 to Miskinis et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, describes hard ferrite materials useful as carrier materials for two-component development processes utilizing rotating core magnets. A useful range of coercivity of greater than 300 gauss when magnetically saturated, and of induced moment of greater than 20 emu/g at an applied field of 1000 gauss is described. Magnetization of the carrier by exposing it to a high magnetic field prior to use in the electrophotographic development process is taught. The use of strontium ferrite as a carrier particle meeting these requirements is disclosed.
Commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,083,166 to Hill et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, describes a low cost development system which uses the principles of SPD and has its own supply of toner with the entire development subsystem replaced when the toner is depleted. This development subsystem has an irregularly shaped stationary shell surrounding a rotatable magnetic core. The shell is shaped to move hard magnetic carrier through a path which provides a relatively long development zone as well as strong magnetic field strength as the developer moves away from the development zone to avoid DPU in the image. This development subsystem has been used commercially in a single-color electrophotographic printer.
Commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 4,714,046 to Steele, et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, describes a magnetic brush applicator for use in an electrographic reproduction apparatus for applying a magnetic two-component developer to an imaging member including a cylindrical non-magnetic toning shell having a rotatably driven magnetic core positioned therein. The axis of rotation of the magnetic core is displaced from the sleeve axis, such displacement being toward a toning zone at which the applicator applies developer to the imaging member. As a result of the non-concentric arrangement between the toning shell and the magnetic core, the torque requirements for rotating the magnetic core are reduced, developer removal from the toning shell is facilitated, and less thermal energy is introduced into the developer during rotation of the magnetic core.
Eastman Kodak currently manufactures electrophotographic equipment utilizing strontium ferrite based developers, rotating magnetic core toning rollers, and a non-concentric arrangement of the magnetic core and sleeve axes. The NexPress color printer is such a product, and can be used to demonstrate the advantages of the present invention.
The SPD two-component development process including rotating core magnets and hard magnetic carrier materials has particular advantages over two-component conventional development processes utilizing stationary core magnets and soft magnetic carrier materials. The SPD toning zone is characterized by developer flipping and churning action. This enables development at very high speeds with a single toning roller. It is believed that the high rate of development is due to developer motion, resulting from the rotating core magnets, transporting net charged carrier particles that have given up some toner particles to the toning shell where they can become discharged and thus not provide an electrical field which opposes development. This motion also constantly provides fresh developer that has not been depleted of toner to the photoreceptor surface. The conductivity of the hard magnetic carrier can be increased to further enhance the rate of development. The fluidized nature in the toning zone leads to particularly smooth, non-grainy deposits of toner. Directionality effects are also reduced. SPD development is particularly capable of handling a wide range of toner particle sizes.
Both SPD and conventional two-component development processes deposit toner on the photoreceptor at a rate proportional to the electric field in the development zone. The strength of the electric field available to attract toner is determined by the potential difference between the latent image on the photoreceptor and the bias voltage applied to the toning shell, divided by the toning zone spacing or toning shell to photoreceptor distance. In most electrophotographic devices, including the Kodak NexPress, the imaging member which carries the photoreceptor and the toning shell are cylinders. Due to the achievable tolerances during their manufacture these components are not perfectly round. The term runout is used to describe how far out of round a cylinder might be; there are numerous specifically defined engineering runout metrics that can be used to describe out of round cylinders. Cylinders can have one lobe, or be egg shaped with two lobes, and the runout can be non-uniform over the length of the cylinder. Surface runout of the cylinder can also be caused by mounting the cylinder on gudgeons which are not perfectly round or do not have an axis of rotation that is perfectly centered in the gudgeon. As an illustration, simple peak to valley runout values of 1 mil are possible in either imaging member or toning shell cylinders, and the toning zone spacing can typically be 15 mil. The electric field for development is thus modulated by 1/15 or 6.7% due to each of these cylinders as they rotate through the toning zone; both cylinders contribute simultaneously to the variation of the development spacing. The resulting toner density is varied by this continuous changing of toning spacing, and typically can be modulated by about the same 6.7% due to each cylinder. The spatial period of such non-uniformity in the resulting toner image is thus dependent on the rotational speed of the rollers and their diameters. There is thus the need to reduce the spacing sensitivity of two-component development processes.
The nature of SPD developer bulk powder is quite cohesive due to the magnetic interaction between permanently magnetized carrier particles. This clumpy nature can lead to slower mixing with freshly replenished toner, which can lead to image non-uniformity defects known as depletion streaks when the job stream includes very high coverage documents causing a large amount of replenisher toner to be added over a short time. The cohesive nature of the SPD developer requires that special designs be used for transport and mixing of the material. Simple screw auger conveyor designs that work with soft magnetic developers are not suitable for the transport of permanently magnetized, magnetically hard SPD materials. Even with these special designs, the transport and mixing of SPD materials in the SPD development subsystem requires significant energy input. There is thus a need to reduce the bulk powder cohesiveness and accordingly increase the free flow ability of SPD developer materials to improve the mixing of carrier with toner. U.S. Pat. No. 6,617,089 to Meyer et al. discloses an electrographic two-component dry developer composition where carrier particles include a soft magnetic material which has a coercivity of less than 300 gauss when magnetically saturated, a magnetic remanence of less than 20 emu/g when in an applied field of 1000 gauss, and a hard magnetic material with a coercivity of at least 300 gauss when magnetically saturated and an induced moment of at least 20 emu/g when in an applied field of 1000 gauss. The mixture of hard and soft carrier particles is disclosed to be a blend of separate particles. The particular usefulness of such a mixture in a development process with rotating core magnets is not described.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,677,098 to Meyer et al. discloses an electrographic two-component dry developer composition where carrier particles includes a soft magnetic material which has a coercivity of at least 300 gauss when magnetically saturated, exhibit a magnetic moment of less than 20 emu/g when in an applied field of 1000 gauss, and a hard magnetic material with a coercivity of at least 300 gauss when magnetically saturated and an induced moment of at least 20 emu/g when in an applied field of 1000 gauss. The mixture of hard and soft carrier particles is disclosed to be a blend of separate particles, as well as a composite of both types of materials in the same particle. The particular usefulness of such a mixture in a development process with rotating core magnets is not described.
Hard magnetic materials from which to prepare carrier particles appropriate for use in an SPD rotating core development process include magnetoplumbite phase ferrites having the general formula PO.6Fe2O3 wherein P is selected from the group consisting of strontium, barium, calcium, lead, and mixtures thereof. Strontium is particularly useful. These materials are also called hexagonal ferrites. The magnetoplumbite ferrite crystal phase has uniaxial magnetic anisotropy in that the a and b crystallographic axes are paramagnetic, while the c crystallographic axis is ferrimagnetic. Details about the magnetic properties of such ferrite magnetic materials can be found in Ferro-Magnetic Materials, E. P. Wolfarth editor, Elsevier Science Publishers B. V., 1982 and Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, D. Jiles, Chapman and Hall, 1991. Powdertech Co. Ltd. Japan provides strontium ferrite grades known as FCS-150, FCS-200 and FCS-300 to Eastman Kodak Co. for use in the NexPress electrophotographic printer. These materials have volume average particle sizes of approximately 17, 21 microns and 30 microns, respectively. The manufacturing method results in approximately spheroidal particles with a rough texture due to the protrusion of the randomly oriented platelet shaped crystals. The c-axis is the direction perpendicular to the platelet. The crystals are on the order of less than one to a few microns in size, and appear to be uniformly or randomly oriented within a carrier particle as seen in a scanning electron micrograph. This random orientation of the permanently magnetic c-axes within each carrier particle results in some c-axes being magnetized more than others after exposure to the high magnetizing field used in the carrier manufacturing process, since the degree to which a given c-axis will be magnetized is proportional to the magnitude of the field it sees which is dependent on its orientation to that applied magnetizing field. Crystallites whose c-axis is aligned perpendicular to the magnetizing field will not become permanently magnetized. After the bulk carrier powder is subject to the magnetizing field, each particle will thus be a permanent magnet with a net north-south axis.
Soft magnetic powders useful as carrier materials for stationary core two component development processes include copper-zinc ferrite, manganese ferrite, manganese-magnesium-strontium ferrite, and lithium ferrite, among others. Powdertech Co. Ltd. Japan provides grades of manganese-magnesium-strontium ferrite known as EF-35 and EF-20, which have volume average particles sizes of approximately 35 microns and 20 microns, respectively. These particles have a surface which has both smooth and rough textured areas, the roughness due to protruding crystallites as seen in a scanning electron micrograph. Materials including EF ferrite, lithium ferrite, manganese ferrite and copper-zinc ferrite have a spinel crystal structure with cubic magnetic anisotropy. Cubic magnetic anisotropy results in an essentially uniform magnetization response to an applied magnetic field for a given crystallite whatever the angle of that crystallite to the field may be.
The carrier materials used commercially in both conventional and SPD two-component development processes typically have a resinous coating applied. A coating is used for a variety of purposes including controlling the rate and degree of triboelectric charging of the carrier with the toner, controlling that tribocharge with respect to environmental conditions such as temperature and humidity, preventing filming of toner ingredients onto the carrier surface, prolonging the useful life of the developer with regard to the triboelectric charging ability, and changing the effective conductivity of the carrier particle, among others. A wide variety of coating materials have been used commercially as carrier coatings, particularly useful have been silicones, acrylics and fluoropolymers. U.S. Pat. No. 4,935,326, U.S. Pat. No. 4,937,166, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,002,846, all to Creature and Hsu, describe blends of resins particularly useful as carrier coatings for two-component development processes.
According to the present invention, there is provided a method for reducing toning spacing sensitivity in an electrophotographic process comprising:
(a) providing a rotating magnetic member within a conductive non-magnetic development sleeve;
(b) providing a developer to the non-magnetic development sleeve for use with the rotating magnetic member including:
(c) moving a charged receiving medium into a toner transfer relationship with the developer on the non-magnetic development sleeve so as to provide a developed image on the receiving medium with reduced toning spacing sensitivity.
A feature of the present invention provides reduced two-component development spacing sensitivity in a rotating magnetic core SPD development system, by providing a mixture of hard and soft magnetic materials in the developer. The mixture can be a blend of separate hard magnetic and soft magnetic particles.
Another feature of the present invention provides reduced bulk powder cohesiveness by providing a mixture of hard and soft magnetic materials in the developer. The mixture can be a blend of separate hard magnetic and soft magnetic particles.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent when taken in conjunction with the following description and drawings wherein identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical features that are common to the figures, and wherein:
a-12b represent scanning electron micrographs of soft magnetic carrier materials;
The attached drawings are for purposes of illustration and are not necessarily to scale.
As used herein, the terms “parallel” and “perpendicular” have a tolerance of ±10°. Further, when toner or carrier particle diameters are specified, these values represent the median diameters.
As used herein, “toner particles” are particles of one or more material(s) that are transferred by an electrophotographic (EP) printer to a receiver to produce a desired effect or structure (e.g., a print image, texture, pattern, or coating) on the receiver. Toner particles can be ground from larger solids, or chemically prepared (e.g., precipitated from a solution of a pigment and a dispersant using an organic solvent), as is known in the art. Toner particles can have a range of diameters, e.g., less than 8 μm, on the order of 10-15 μm, up to approximately 30 μm, or larger (“diameter” refers to the volume-weighted median diameter, as determined by a device such as a Coulter Multisizer).
“Toner” refers to a material or mixture that contains toner particles and that can form an image, pattern, or coating when deposited on an imaging member including a photoreceptor, a photoconductor, or an electrostatically-charged or magnetic surface. Toner can be transferred from the imaging member to a receiver. Toner is also referred to in the art as marking particles, dry ink, or developer, but note that herein “developer” is used differently, as described below. Toner can be a dry mixture of particles or a suspension of particles in a liquid toner base.
Toner includes toner particles and can include other particles. Any of the particles in toner can be of various types and have various properties. Such properties can include absorption of incident electromagnetic radiation (e.g., particles containing colorants such as dyes or pigments), absorption of moisture or gasses (e.g., desiccants or getters), suppression of bacterial growth (e.g., biocides, particularly useful in liquid-toner systems), adhesion to the receiver (e.g., binders), electrical conductivity or low magnetic reluctance (e.g., metal particles), electrical resistivity, texture, gloss, magnetic remanence, florescence, resistance to etchants, and other properties of additives known in the art. Toner particles themselves can be coated with even finer particles known as surface treatment agents. Such fine particles can be sub-micron to a few microns in size, and are added to enhance properties such as the free flow ability of the bulk toner powder and the toner triboelectric charging characteristics. Surface treatment agents in common use include pyrogenic silica, colloidal silica, titania, alumina, and fine resin particles, among others. The surface treatment agents themselves are commonly coated with compounds including a wide variety of types of silanes and silicones.
In single-component or mono-component development systems, “developer” refers to toner alone. In these systems, none, some, or all of the particles in the toner can themselves be magnetic. However, developer in a mono-component system does not include magnetic carrier particles. In dual-component, two-component, or multi-component development systems, “developer” refers to a mixture including toner particles and magnetic carrier particles, which can be electrically-conductive or non-conductive. Toner particles can be magnetic or non-magnetic. The carrier particles can be larger than the toner particles, e.g., 15-20 μm or 20-300 μm in diameter. A magnetic field is used to move the developer in these systems by exerting a force on the magnetic carrier particles. The developer is moved into proximity with an imaging member or transfer member by the magnetic field, and the toner or toner particles in the developer are transferred from the developer to the member by an electric field, as will be described further below. The magnetic carrier particles are not intentionally deposited on the imaging member by action of the electric field; only the toner is intentionally deposited. However, magnetic carrier particles, and other particles in the toner or developer, can be unintentionally transferred to an imaging member. Developer can include other additives known in the art, such as those listed above for toner. Toner and carrier particles can be substantially spherical or non-spherical.
The electrophotographic process can be embodied in devices including printers, copiers, scanners, and facsimiles, and analog or digital devices, all of which are referred to herein as “printers.” Various embodiments described herein are useful with electrostatographic printers such as electrophotographic printers that employ toner developed on an electrophotographic receiver, and ionographic printers and copiers that do not rely upon an electrophotographic receiver. Electrophotography and ionography are types of electrostatography (printing using electrostatic fields), which is a subset of electrography (printing using electric fields).
A digital reproduction printing system (“printer”) typically includes a digital front-end processor (DFE), a print engine (also referred to in the art as a “marking engine”) for applying toner to the receiver, and one or more post-printing finishing system(s) (e.g., a UV coating system, a glosser system, or a laminator system). A printer can reproduce pleasing black-and-white or color images on a receiver. A printer can also produce selected patterns of toner on a receiver, which patterns (e.g., surface textures) do not correspond directly to a visible image. The DFE receives input electronic files (such as Postscript command files) composed of images from other input devices (e.g., a scanner, a digital camera). The DFE can include various function processors, e.g., a raster image processor (RIP), image positioning processor, image manipulation processor, color processor, or image storage processor. The DFE rasterizes input electronic files into image bitmaps for the print engine to print. In some embodiments, the DFE permits a human operator to set up parameters such as layout, font, color, paper type, or post-finishing options. The print engine takes the rasterized image bitmap from the DFE and renders the bitmap into a form that can control the printing process from the exposure device to transferring the print image onto the receiver. The finishing system applies features such as protection, glossing, or binding to the prints. The finishing system can be implemented as an integral component of a printer, or as a separate machine through which prints are fed after they are printed.
The printer can also include a color management system which captures the characteristics of the image printing process implemented in the print engine (e.g., the electrophotographic process) to provide known, consistent color reproduction characteristics. The color management system can also provide known color reproduction for different inputs (e.g., digital camera images or film images).
In an embodiment of an electrophotographic modular printing machine useful with various embodiments, e.g., the NEXPRESS SX3900 printer manufactured by Eastman Kodak Company of Rochester, N.Y., color-toner print images are made in a plurality of color imaging modules arranged in tandem, and the print images are successively electrostatically transferred to a receiver adhered to a transport web moving through the modules. Colored toners include colorants, e.g., dyes or pigments, which absorb specific wavelengths of visible light. Commercial machines of this type typically employ intermediate transfer members in the respective modules for transferring visible images from the photoreceptor and transferring print images to the receiver. In other electrophotographic printers, each visible image is directly transferred to a receiver to form the corresponding print image.
Electrophotographic printers having the capability to deposit clear toner using an additional imaging module are also known. The addition of a clear-toner overcoat to a color print is desirable for providing protection of the print from fingerprints and reducing certain visual artifacts. Clear toner uses particles that are similar to the toner particles of the color development subsystems but without colored material (e.g., dye or pigment) incorporated into the toner particles. However, a clear-toner overcoat can add cost and reduce color gamut of the print; thus, it is desirable to provide for operator/user selection to determine whether or not a clear-toner overcoat will be applied to the entire print. A uniform layer of clear toner can be provided. A layer that varies inversely according to heights of the toner stacks can also be used to establish level toner stack heights. The respective color toners are deposited one upon the other at respective locations on the receiver and the height of a respective color toner stack is the sum of the toner heights of each respective color. Uniform stack height provides the print with a more even or uniform gloss.
Referring to
During a single pass through the five printing modules 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 each receiver 42 can have transferred in registration thereto up to five single-color toner images to form a pentachrome image. As used herein, the term “pentachrome” implies that combinations of various of the five colors are combined in a print image to form other colors on the receiver 42 at various locations on the receiver 42, and that all five colors participate to form process colors in at least some of the subsets. That is, each of the five colors of toner can be combined with toner of one or more of the other colors at a particular location on the receiver 42 to form a color different than the colors of the individual toners combined at that location. In an embodiment, printing module 31 forms black (K) print images, 32 forms yellow (Y) print images, 33 forms magenta (M) print images, and 34 forms cyan (C) print images.
Printing module 35 can form a red, blue, green, or other fifth print image, including an image formed from a clear toner (i.e. one lacking pigment). The four subtractive primary colors, cyan, magenta, yellow, and black, can be combined in various combinations of subsets thereof to form a representative spectrum of colors. The color gamut or range of the printer 100 is dependent upon the materials used and the process used for forming the colors. The fifth color can therefore be added to improve the color gamut. In addition to adding to the color gamut, the fifth color can also be a specialty color toner or spot color, such as for making proprietary logos or colors that cannot be produced with only CMYK colors (e.g., metallic, fluorescent, or pearlescent colors), or a clear toner or tinted toner. Tinted toners absorb less light than they transmit, but do contain pigments or dyes that move the hue of light passing through them towards the hue of the tint. For example, a blue-tinted toner coated on white paper will cause the white paper to appear light blue when viewed under white light, and will cause yellows printed under the blue-tinted toner to appear slightly greenish under white light.
A receiver 42A is shown after passing through printing module 35. A print image 38 on receiver 42A includes unfused toner particles.
Subsequent to transfer of the respective print images, overlaid in registration, one from each of the respective printing modules 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, receiver 42A is advanced to a fuser 60, i.e. a fusing or fixing assembly, to fuse print image 38 to receiver 42A. A transport web 81 transports the print-image-carrying receivers to fuser 60, which fixes the toner particles to the respective receivers 42A by the application of heat and pressure. The receivers 42A are serially de-tacked from transport web 81 to permit them to feed cleanly into fuser 60. Transport web 81 is then reconditioned for reuse at a cleaning station 86 by cleaning and neutralizing the charges on the opposed surfaces of transport web 81. A mechanical cleaning station (not shown) for scraping or vacuuming toner off transport web 81 can also be used independently or with cleaning station 86. The mechanical cleaning station can be disposed along transport web 81 before or after cleaning station 86 in the direction of rotation of transport web 81.
Fuser 60 includes a heated fusing roller 62 and an opposing pressure roller 64 that form a fusing nip 66 therebetween. In an embodiment, fuser 60 also includes a release fluid application substation 68 that applies release fluid, e.g., silicone oil, to fusing roller 62. Alternatively, wax-containing toner can be used without applying release fluid to fusing roller 62. Other embodiments of fusers, both contact and non-contact, can be employed. For example, solvent fixing uses solvents to soften the toner particles so they bond with the receiver 42A. Photoflash fusing uses short bursts of high-frequency electromagnetic radiation (e.g., ultraviolet light) to melt the toner. Radiant fixing uses lower-frequency electromagnetic radiation (e.g., infrared light) to more slowly melt the toner. Microwave fixing uses electromagnetic radiation in the microwave range to heat the receivers (primarily), thereby causing the toner particles to melt by heat conduction, so that the toner is fixed to the receiver 42A.
The receivers (e.g., receiver 42B) carrying the fused image (e.g., fused image 39) are transported in a series from the fuser 60 along a path either to a remote output tray 69, or back to printing modules 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 to create an image on the backside of the receiver 42B, i.e. to form a duplex print. Receivers 42B can also be transported to any suitable output accessory. For example, an auxiliary fuser or glossing assembly can provide a clear-toner overcoat. Printer 100 can also include multiple fusers 60 to support applications such as overprinting, as known in the art.
In various embodiments, between fuser 60 and output tray 69, receiver 42B passes through a finisher 70. The finisher 70 performs various paper-handling operations, such as folding, stapling, saddle-stitching, collating, and binding.
Printer 100 includes main printer apparatus logic and control unit (LCU) 99, which receives input signals from the various sensors associated with printer 100 and sends control signals to the components of printer 100. LCU 99 can include a microprocessor incorporating suitable look-up tables and control software executable by the LCU 99. It can also include a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), programmable logic device (PLD), programmable logic controller (PLC) (with a program in, e.g., ladder logic), microcontroller, or other digital control system. LCU 99 can include memory for storing control software and data. Sensors associated with the fusing assembly provide appropriate signals to the LCU 99. In response to the sensors, the LCU 99 issues command and control signals that adjust the heat or pressure within fusing nip 66 and other operating parameters of fuser 60 for receivers 42, 42A, 43B. This permits printer 100 to print on receivers of various thicknesses and surface finishes, such as glossy or matte.
Image data for writing by printer 100 can be processed by a raster image processor (RIP; not shown), which can include a color separation screen generator or generators. The output of the RIP can be stored in frame or line buffers for transmission of the color separation print data to each of the respective LED writers, e.g., for black (K), yellow (Y), magenta (M), cyan (C), and red (R), respectively. The RIP or color separation screen generator can be a part of printer 100 or remote therefrom. Image data processed by the RIP can be obtained from a color document scanner or a digital camera or produced by a computer or from a memory or network which typically includes image data representing a continuous image that needs to be reprocessed into halftone image data in order to be adequately represented by the printer. The RIP can perform image processing processes, e.g., color correction, in order to obtain the desired color print. Color image data is separated into the respective colors and converted by the RIP to halftone dot image data in the respective color using matrices, which include desired screen angles (measured counterclockwise from rightward, the +X direction) and screen rulings. The RIP can be a suitably-programmed computer or logic device and is adapted to employ stored or computed matrices and templates for processing separated color image data into rendered image data in the form of halftone information suitable for printing. These matrices can include a screen pattern memory (SPM).
Further details regarding printer 100 are provided in U.S. Pat. No. 6,608,641, issued on Aug. 19, 2003, to Peter S. Alexandrovich et al., and in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0133870, published on Jun. 22, 2006, by Yee S. Ng et al., the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Referring to
A receiver, Rn, arriving from supply unit 40 (
A power supply 105 provides individual transfer currents to the transfer backup members 113, 123, 133, 143, and 153. LCU 99 (
LCU 99 sends control signals to the charging subsystem 210, an exposure subsystem 220 (e.g., laser or LED writers), and a respective development subsystem 225 of each printing module 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 (
Imaging member 111 includes photoreceptor 206. Photoreceptor 206 includes a photoconductive layer formed on an electrically conductive substrate. The photoconductive layer is an insulator in the substantial absence of light so that electric charges are retained on its surface. Upon exposure to light, the charge is dissipated. In various embodiments, photoreceptor 206 is part of, or disposed over, the surface of imaging member 111, which can be a plate, drum, or belt. Photoreceptors 206 can include a homogeneous layer of a single material such as vitreous selenium or a composite layer containing a photoconductor and another material. Photoreceptors 206 can also contain multiple layers.
The exposure subsystem 220 is provided for image-wise modulating the uniform electrostatic charge on photoreceptor 206 by exposing photoreceptor 206 to electromagnetic radiation to form a latent electrostatic image (e.g., of a separation corresponding to the color of toner deposited at this printing module). The uniformly-charged photoreceptor 206 is typically exposed to actinic radiation provided by selectively activating particular light sources in an LED array or a laser device outputting light directed at photoreceptor 206. In embodiments using laser devices, a rotating polygon (not shown) is used to scan one or more laser beam(s) across the photoreceptor 206 in the fast-scan direction. One addressable dot site is exposed at a time, and the intensity or duty cycle of the laser beam is varied at each dot site. In embodiments using an LED array, the array can include a plurality of LEDs arranged next to each other in a line, all addressable dot sites in one row of dot sites on the photoreceptor 206 can be selectively exposed simultaneously, and the intensity or duty cycle of each LED can be varied within a line exposure time to expose each dot site in the row during that line exposure time.
As used herein, an “engine pixel” is the smallest addressable unit on photoreceptor 206 which the light source (e.g., laser or LED) can expose with a selected exposure different from the exposure of another engine pixel. Engine pixels can overlap, e.g., to increase addressability in the slow-scan direction (S). Each engine pixel has a corresponding engine pixel location, and the exposure applied to the engine pixel location is described by an engine pixel level.
The exposure subsystem 220 can be a write-white or write-black system. In a write-white or charged-area-development (CAD) system, the exposure dissipates charge on areas of photoreceptor 206 to which toner should not adhere. Toner particles are charged to be attracted to the charge remaining on photoreceptor 206. The exposed areas therefore correspond to white areas of a printed page. In a write-black or discharged-area development (DAD) system, the toner is charged to be attracted to a bias voltage applied to photoreceptor 206 and repelled from the charge on photoreceptor 206. Therefore, toner adheres to areas where the charge on photoreceptor 206 has been dissipated by exposure. The exposed areas therefore correspond to black areas of a printed page.
The development subsystem 225 includes a toning shell 226, which can be rotating or stationary, for applying toner of a selected color to the latent image on photoreceptor 206 to produce a visible image on photoreceptor 206. Development subsystem 225 is electrically biased by a suitable respective voltage to develop the respective latent image, which voltage can be supplied by a power supply (not shown). Developer is provided to toning shell 226 by a supply system (not shown), e.g., a supply roller, auger, or belt from a developer sump 230. Toner is transferred by electrostatic forces from development subsystem 225 to photoreceptor 206. These forces can include Coulombic forces between charged toner particles and the charged electrostatic latent image, and Lorentz forces on the charged toner particles due to the electric field produced by the bias voltages.
A feed roller 235 transports developer 234 from developer sump 230, which includes mixers 237, to toning shell 226. A metering skive 229, positioned in proximity to toning shell 226 between feed roller 235 and toning zone 236, is used to control the amount of developer 234 that is transported to a toning zone 236. Toner is transferred from toning shell 226 to photoreceptor 206 in toning zone 236. As described above, toner is selectively supplied to photoreceptor 206 by toning shell 226.
Toner is removed from developer 234 to develop the latent image on photoreceptor 206 in toning zone 236, and it is necessary to replenish the developer 234 with fresh toner to maintain the properties of the developer 234. A signal from a toner monitor 239 is used as a measure of the percentage of toner in developer 234 and this signal is sent to LCU 99 (
As toner is added to developer 234 by replenishment tube 238 it should be quickly mixed into developer 234, charged to an appropriate level, and transported to feed roller 235 so that the developer 234 delivered to a toning zone 236 is homogeneous and uniformly charged. This is accomplished by mixers 237 in developer sump 230. The mixing and transport of developer 234 is dependent on the powder flow properties of developer 234. A more cohesive developer 234 requires that more power be provided to mixers 237 to mix and transport the developer 234.
Referring to
The sensitivity of the toning process and the resulting print density to the spacing between toning shell 226 and photoreceptor 206 in toning zone 236 was evaluated on a NexPress Digital Production Color Press operating at a printing speed of 514 millimeters per second. A standard developer load of 1300 grams of the developer 234 to be examined was placed in development subsystem 225 and printer 100 was operated in a special printing mode that will be described below. The developer 234 to be examined was generally cyan and placed in cyan imaging module 34 (
The special printing mode used to determine the sensitivity of the development process to toning zone spacing 228 used transmission densitometer array 104 installed about transport web 81 to measure the amount of toner developed and transferred to transport web 81 as shown in
Imperfections in toning shell 226, imaging member 141, and the associated components that mount them in printing module 34 can cause a variation in toning zone spacing 228. Examples of imperfections that will cause a variation in toning zone spacing 228 are a deviation from cylindricity of toning shell 226 or imaging member 141. Shims 145 (
Measurements of the sensitivity of the toning process to toning zone spacing were made for a variety of magnetic carrier materials and also at different developer mass area densities (DMAD). DMAD is defined as the mass of developer present in the toning zone per unit area of the toning shell and the units are grams of developer per square inch. DMAD can be controlled by adjusting metering skive spacing 231, which is the distance between metering skive 229 and toning shell 226. In these measurements, metering skive spacings of 0.035″, 0.042″, 0.049″, and 0.056″ were used.
In general, the sensitivity of the toning process to toning zone spacing decreases as DMAD increases. However, an artifact known as high frequency banding is increasingly visible in prints as DMAD increases. It is necessary to measure both the high frequency banding and the toning spacing sensitivity to assess the efficacy of the various magnetic carrier materials. High frequency banding has a temporal frequency that corresponds to the frequency of magnetic pole transitions in toning zone 236 caused by rotation of magnetic core 227. In this particular embodiment, magnetic core 227 has 14 magnetic poles 224 designated by “N” and “S” in
The measurement of high frequency banding is made by scanning flat field prints of various optical reflection densities ranging from 0.15 to 1.0. The scanned reflection density data are averaged in the direction perpendicular to the transport direction and then further analyzed to produce frequency domain spectra showing the amplitude of the variation in the averaged density at the temporal frequency of the variation. An example of frequency domain data of the high frequency banding is shown in
Data for four different magnetic carrier blends of soft and hard magnetic materials are also shown in
The solid circles in
The open diamonds in
The open circles in
Table 1 summarizes the developer mass area densities (DMAD) measured for the tested developers at the various metering skive spacings.
The magnetic properties in the form of hysteresis loops for the particularly useful hard magnetic strontium ferrite FCS-200 and particularly useful soft magnetic manganese-magnesium-strontium ferrite EF-35 are illustrated in
The permanent magnetization of a strontium ferrite carrier alters its response to an applied magnetic field, as seen in
It is believed that the change in the magnetic response of hard magnetic carrier materials to the degree to which they have been magnetized prior to sale and subsequent use in a rotating magnetic core development process is important in the realization of the usefulness of the present invention. The magnetic domain structure in non-magnetized hard magnetic magnetoplumbite phase carrier powders includes multiple anti-parallel domains with magnetization vectors parallel to the crystallographic c axis. An applied low strength magnetic field, such as that produced by a magnetic toner concentration monitor, is able to bend the domain walls of these small volume, small net moment domains, resulting in the observed susceptibility of about 0.02 emu/(g*Oe) measured for non-magnetized strontium ferrite materials. The output signal of the magnetic toner concentration monitor is proportional to that value; this signal drops as toner is mixed in and dilutes the spatial concentration of carrier in the sensing zone of the monitor, thus providing the basis of toner concentration control in the development apparatus and process. If the field a hard magnetic material is subjected to is high enough to increase the size of domains aligned with the field at the expense of those domains oppositely disposed, the result is the development of a retained magnetization, quantifiable as magnetic remanence value on a measuring device such as a VSM. As the domain volume and thus net magnetic moment increase in this manner as the magnetizing field is increased, the domain wall energy required to stabilize the magnetic structure increases, and in consequence, the response of the moment to an applied field, i.e., the susceptibility, decreases. At higher fields, the crystallite grains become consumed as single domains, and the susceptibility of a randomly oriented hard magnetic strontium ferrite carrier powder collection levels off, in the range of about 0.008 emu/(g*Oe). At this point ferromagnetic saturation has occurred for those domains appropriately aligned to the applied field; this is the reason the curves coalesce at higher fields in
The magnetic characteristics of exemplary carrier materials suitable for use in hard magnetic, soft magnetic particle blends in a two-component development process utilizing a toning station with a rotating magnetic core according to the present invention, are listed in Table 3. These properties were measured by the VSM pellet sample technique previously described. The Initial Susceptibility is the slope of magnetization versus field at 100 Oe; the Induced Moment at 1000 G is the value of magnetization at 1000 Oe; the Saturation Magnetic Moment Ms is taken as the magnetization at 10000 Oe, the highest field of the measurement procedure; the Remanence Magnetization Mr is the value taken when the field is brought back to zero from the 10000 Oe condition; and, the Coercivity Hc is the value of the inverse polarity magnetic field required to reduce the magnetization of the sample to zero. Note that values for the magnetic field in oersteds Oe and the magnetic flux density in gauss G are interchangeable. The hard magnetic material described in Table 3 is currently used in electrophotographic printers manufactured by Eastman Kodak; it includes strontium ferrite that has been subjected to a magnetizing field. Barium and lead ferrites are also suitable as hard magnetic carrier powders; their magnetic properties are similar to those of strontium ferrite. The hard magnetic carrier particles can also be composite particles included smaller hard magnetic particles dispersed in a resin matrix. The soft ferrite powders described in Table 3 were obtained from Powdertech Corp. of Japan, with the exception of lithium ferrite which was prepared at Eastman Kodak as LiFe5O8. These soft magnetic powders range in median diameter from 20 to 60 microns, and all have a saturation moment of less than 100 emu/g. It has been found that soft magnetic carrier particles suitable for use in thick nap conventional two-component development processes including sponge iron and stainless steel which are greater than 100 microns in median diameter, and have saturation magnetic moments of greater than 100 emu/g (207 emu/g and 171 emu/g for these examples, respectively), are not suitable for use in the present invention. Particles of these carrier materials fling off of a rotating core magnet based magnetic brush assembly loaded with their blends with a suitable hard magnetic powder. Composite soft magnetic particles less than 100 microns in size and 100 emu/g in saturation magnetization included smaller particles of soft magnetic materials dispersed in a resin matrix are also suitable for use in the present invention.
The addition of the soft magnetic carrier material to the permanently magnetized hard magnetic carrier based developer increases the free flow ability of the bulk developer powder. This enhances the ability to quickly mix in replenisher toner with developer in the mixer section of a rotating core toning apparatus, as exemplified in
The phenomenon of the agglomeration of soft magnetic carrier materials into non-moving chains on a magnetic brush with a rotating magnetic core was described previously. This “freezing” property can still occur in the inventive blends of hard and soft carrier particles at high concentrations of the soft component. For example, it has been found that freezing begins to occur at approximately 75% by weight soft component in a blend of hard and soft carrier materials including 16 micron sized FCS150 strontium ferrite and 20 micron sized manganese-magnesium-strontium EF ferrite (obtained from Powdertech Corp. as previously described), when running on a magnetic brush operating in the range of 800 to 3000 core rpm with 14 magnetic poles in the core magnet assembly. As the concentration of toner is increased, it was found that even more soft component can be tolerated before the developer freezes. For example, with a 6% by weight toner concentration developer of the 6 micron sized “HD” toner sold for use in NexPress printers manufactured by Eastman Kodak, the freezing process happens at 95% by weight soft component with the same hard and soft materials just described, over the same range of brush speeds. It was found that the higher the speed of the rotating core magnets, the lower the amount of soft component that can be tolerated before the agglomeration process occurs. The effect of core speed is however minor compared to the effect of toner concentration in the useful amount of soft component. A particularly useful range of added soft component to a hard magnetic developer is approximately 10% to 75% by weight when toner concentration is in the range of 3% to 25% by weight.
The present invention is inclusive of combinations of the embodiments described herein. References to “a particular embodiment” and the like refer to features that are present in at least one embodiment of the invention. Separate references to “an embodiment” or “particular embodiments” or the like do not necessarily refer to the same embodiment or embodiments; however, such embodiments are not mutually exclusive, unless so indicated or as are readily apparent to one of skill in the art. The use of singular or plural in referring to the “method” or “methods” and the like is not limiting. The word “or” is used in this disclosure in a non-exclusive sense, unless otherwise explicitly noted.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations, combinations, and modifications can be effected by a person of ordinary skill in the art within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4473029 | Fritz et al. | Sep 1984 | A |
4546060 | Miskinis | Oct 1985 | A |
4714046 | Steele et al. | Dec 1987 | A |
4935326 | Creatura et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
4937166 | Creatura et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
5002846 | Creatura et al. | Mar 1991 | A |
5083166 | Hill et al. | Jan 1992 | A |
5106714 | Saha et al. | Apr 1992 | A |
5336580 | Tavernier et al. | Aug 1994 | A |
5466552 | Sato et al. | Nov 1995 | A |
5518849 | Sato et al. | May 1996 | A |
5595850 | Honjo et al. | Jan 1997 | A |
5633110 | Desie et al. | May 1997 | A |
6608641 | Alexandrovich et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
6617089 | Meyer et al. | Sep 2003 | B2 |
6677098 | Meyer et al. | Jan 2004 | B2 |
7120379 | Eck et al. | Oct 2006 | B2 |
8617781 | Kawauchi | Dec 2013 | B2 |
20020168200 | Stelter et al. | Nov 2002 | A1 |
20030099892 | Meyer et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
20060133870 | Ng et al. | Jun 2006 | A1 |